I eather Rail or 1 x iLig AIL AW an iit Editorial k NO Labor Fifty Years Of Continuous Publication VOL. LI. No. 101 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1941 Z-323 PRICE FIVE CENTS Track Team 'Corky' To Caper At Winter Carnival Sets Records In Triangular Cinder Meet Frank McCarthy , Paces Squad With 12 Points; New Pole Vault Mark EstablishedBy Decker State, Ypsi Beaten, Dropping_9 Firsts By HAL WILSON (Special To The Daily) JENISON FIELD HOUSE, East Lan- sing, Feb, 25-Michigan's powerful cinder squad conquered Michigan Normal, Michigan State, and a slow clay track here tonight to sweep its annual triangular track with 75 7-10 points. Normal took second with 39 2-10, while the Spartans were a poor third with 15 1-10. All-around power was the deciding factor and after the first two events, in which the Wolverines and the Hurons each marked up 11 points, the outcome was never in doubt. Four Meet Records Although four meet records were established, the times and distances were in general poor. Performing on a track consisting of an experimental clay compound, the members of all three teams had difficulty with their spikes, and were slowed up consider- ably. For Michigan sophomore Frank Mc- Carthy was the outstanding perform- er. The powerful Birmingham lad accounted for 12 points in four events, with one first, a pair of seconds and a third. Broadjumping in the best form of his career, McCarthy leaped a startling '23 feet 1-8 inch to outdis- tance his nearest competitor by six inches. Decker Wins Again In the pole vault junior Charlie Decker continued his recently adopt- ed record smashing tactics by crack- Ing the Spartns' field house mark of 13 feet, 4inches. The Wolverine cleared the bar at 13 feet, 5/2inches, and then retired for the evening with- out attempting to go higher. Two of Normal's three first places were chalked up by long-striding Whitey Hlad, who swept both 75 yard hurdle events. Since the distance (Continued on Page 3) Petitions Due For Jordan Advisorships Petitioning for student advisorships in Jordan Hall starts today, Esther Colton, House Director announced yesterday. The advisory system was initiated in the dormitory this fall for the purpose of providing the freshmen with a guiding hand in their first year on campus. Twenty upperclass women will be chosen for the posi- tions, which are honorary and in- clude a small deduction from the annual dormitory expenses. The petitions, which are available now at the Office of the Director of Residence Halls, 205 South Wing, should be filled out and returned to Miss Colton on or before Thursday, March 7. A personal interview with each petitioner willbe arranged at a later date and those chosen will go through a training cours, this spring which will better prepare them for the. duties and responsibilities of the following year. Sale Of Tickets For Frosh Frolic Will Start Today Tickets for Frosh Frolic will go on sale to holders of freshman identifi- cation cards from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Ljday at the Travel Desk of the Union, Marvin Borman, '44, chair- man, announced yesterday. Sale of tickets to freshmen only will continue Thursday and Friday. If any remain they will be put on sale for the general public. Johnnie "Scat" Davis., acclaimed as "the band of the year," will supply BETTY JANE 'CORKY' COURTRIGHT Skating Of Torky' Courtright .Will Feature Winter Carnival Shown practicing the skating strokes she'll display- before the audience of the Michigan Winter Carnival Sunday evening in the Coli- seum is Betty Jane "Corky" 'Court- right, daughter of Michigan's golfing coach. "Corky" is a featured member of the Olympia Skating Club of Detroit, Edwin Neville Will :Discuss Eastern Asta Delivering the second of a series of four University lectures, Mr. Ed- win L. Neville, former American Min- ister to Thailand, will discuss "Fron- tiers in East Asia" at 4:15 p.m. to- day in the Rackham Amphitheatre, under the auspices of the political science department. Neville traced the development of Chinese cultural and political insti- tutions in his first lecture here Mon- day as a background for today's and two subsequent talks on "The Consol- idation of Japan" and "Far Eastern Reactions to Western Penetration." Graduating from the University in 1907, Neville entered the foreign ser- vice and served as Consul and Con- sul-General in various posts in China and Japan before becoming Secretary of the American Embassy at Tokyo in 1925. He was appointed Counsellor of Embassy and Consul-General in Tokyo in 1928. In 1937 Neville was appointed Min- ister to Thailand, the highest honor which is accorded a career diplomat,y a post he held until his retirement in 1940.% which will be the chief attraction of the indoor events of the Carnival beginning at 7:30 p.m. at the cam- pus' favorite skating rendezvous. Tickets for the Carnival are on sale today and the rest of the week at the desk of the Michigan Union. Another attraction of the Gala Ice Show will be competitive events be- tween fancy skaters from the cam- pus. Chairman Jack Grady, '42, of the Ice Carnival says that the five sorority, five fraternity and two dorm- itory members who comprise the fan- cy skating corps are people "many of us will know and recognize even in their skating garb." An exhibition by the Ann Arbor Skating Club and the award of tro- phies to the winners of the tobog- ganing, skating and fancy skating campetition will follow the main events. Free skating after the show to ev- eryone until 10:30 tp.m. will be in order after presentation of the two championship awards to the women's and men's groups standing highest in all events. Skiiing and snow-carving compe- tition will be held this week if there is a sufficient snow-fall, Grady said, remarking that trophies in these events will also be awarded at the Coliseum Sunday evening if the ele- ments are favorable. This is the first year that a Winter Carnival of such an extended pro- gram has been held at Michigan,' Grady pointed out. Forty-four cam- pus groups have entered the compe- tition and Ann Arbor business men have cooperated to make the Carnival a success, he said. Eleven trophies valued at over $250 will be given away on Sunday evening, Grady re- vealed. First Exams For Seniors To Be Given Com pulsory Test Today Required For School Of Graduate Studies '41 Class To Write In Hill Auditorium The first in a series of two exam- inations comprising the Graduate Record Examination required of all seniors in the College of Literature, Science and the Arts and the School of Education graduating in June or August will be given from 7 to 11 p.m. today in Hill Auditorum. The examination will be of a gen- eral nature, covering all the work taken by the student during his at- tendance at the University. Although the test grade will have no bearing on whether or not the student may graduate, the examination must be taken by all except those who receive special exemption from Dean Lloyd S. 'Woodburne. Any student who intends to enter the University School of Graduate Studies must either have taken this' two-part examination before admis- sion or must take it after enrollment, Dr. Woodburne said. Forms, which must be filled out by each of the students taking the examination were passed out during registration periods two weeks ago and should be brought to the exami- nation, Dr. Woodburne added. Advanced examinations in the sub-1 jects which may be indicated by the individual student on the forms will be given tomorrow night at the same time and in the same place. Introduced on the University cam- pus this year, the graduate record examination has been and now is fi- nanced by the Carnegie Corporation of New York and is managed by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advance- (Continued on Page 2)1 Gould Presides Over Annual I Union Smoker; Freshmen Hear Campus Leaders Discuss Fieldsr Of Outside Activities 1 Between the hoary anecdotes of "Joke-Master" Douglas Gould, '41,1 president of the Michigan Union, up- wards of 400 second-semester fresh- Smen heard 16 campus leadersrde- scribe the functions of their respect- ive organizations at the annual Activ- ities Smoker held in the ballroom of1 the Union yesterday evening. Gould presided at the Smoker1 which is sponsored annually by the Daily and Union to help acquaint eligible members of the neophyte class with the multifarious campus1 activities they may participate in during their years at Michigan. After the brief descriptive talks by the organization representatives, Bob Morgan of the University Alumni Association showed movies of the an- nual initiation of Michigamua, high- est senior men's honor society, and refreshments followed. The Activities Smoker was gener- ally well-received by 400 members of the class of '44: George Roney said he discovered quite a bit about campus activities that he did not learn about during' the freshman orientation program last fall. Although John Erlewine had al- ready decided on The Daily editorial staff as his line of pursuit, he thought the information and the refresh- ments were well worth the while. He also noted that, in his opinion, Toast- master Gould's jokes had improved since the freshman orientation pro- gram last fall. , Football already occupies the time of Julius Franks, but he came to the smoker to learn more about the work being done by the Student Religious Association at Lane Hall. Debaters Will Meet ForeignCompetition "Trelawney of the Wells," Play Production's fourth presentation of the year, will open a four-day run, Pattee Claims Equality Need nCooperation Cooperation between the Americas is conceivable only in terms of equal- ity, Richard Pattee of the Division of Cultural Relations, Department of State declared in a University lec- ture sponsored by the University Com- mittee on Defense Issues here yes- terday. "The whole inter-American move- ment is futile if the United States assumes the missionary attitude to- ward Latin-America and fails to re- alize that the southern republics have much to offer in return," Mr. Pattee asserted. "It is of the utmost importance that Pan-American relations be based on mutual respect," he stated. "The United States should offer certain facilities and ideas, but must also accept some and maintain a respect for the cultural and political insti- tutions of South America." Observing that South Americans are characteristically individualistic and do not organize into associations and clubs to promote their ideas, Mr. Pattee warned against considering the southern republics inferior be- cause their activities do not fit into familiar United States patterns. Mr. Pattee pointed out that the United States' interest in South America has been historically perm- anent, but the present situation has intensified recognition of the funda- mental ideas related to the commun- ity of common interests in this hem- isphere. Noting that the "undercurrent of (Continued on Pag 2) at 8:30 p.m. today, in the Lydia Men- delssohn Theatre. The comedy, by Arthur Wing Pi- nero, outstanding dramatist of the 19th Century, is a story of theatrical; people. In the play, the grandson of the Vice-chancellor of England falls in love with an actress from the Wells Theatre and the resulting complica- tions form the plot of the drama. Part of the scenes are laid in a the- atrical boarding house of the Sixties and the rest are in the home of the wealthy nobleman. This is the first costume production of the year for the drama group whose previous efforts include "Three Men on a Horse," "The Bat," and "Margin for Error." Twenty-five cos- tumes of 1860 vintage were designed for the play by Emma Hirsch. Prof. Valentine B. Windt, of the Speech department, is director of "Trelawney of the Wells."t Tickets for the play may be pur- chased at the box ofice of the Lydia Mendelssohn for 35, 50 and 75 cents. All seats are reserved. Technic Seeks MARGUERITE MINK, '41 k ati, 'relawney Of The Wells' Opens Run At Lydia Mendelssohn Today Plays Imo"en Parrott In Trelawney' Eden, Turks Will Discuss Views On War In Conference Russia 'Gave Suggestions' In Bulgarian Pact, Says Paper; Rift Is Denied Between Mutual Allies Officials Assure U.S. Ties Still Hold (By The Associated Press) British announce capture 400 Italians in Eritrea; take Brava, only 150 miles from Mogadisco, Somaliland capital; British bomb- ers attack Tripoli in western Lib- ya. * * * Germany claims 253,000 tons of British sjipping sunk within few days; British retort "untrue." British bombers heavily attack Nazi submarine base at Brest; Ex- plosives straddle 10,000-ton Ger- man cruiser; Berlin says no mili- tary damage was inflicted. Russia appropriates $14,200,000,- 00 for 1941'defense. * * * Greek sources say 105,000 Ital- ian soldiers "put out of actio" in war with Fascists. (By The Associated Press) ISTANBUL, Turkey, Feb. 25.-An exchange of views between Britain and Turkey, bound by pledges of mu- tual aid in the event of an act of, aggression leading to war in the Med- iterranean, is slated for tomorrow at Ankara, the Turkish capital. Two of Britain's highest leaders, Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and Gen. Sir John G. Dill, Chief of the Imperial General Staff, arrived by plane today at Adana, in Southern Turkey, and entrained for Ankara. Discussing British-Turkish rela- tions in the light of Germany's ad- vance in the Balkans and Turkish Foreign MinisteriSucrutSaracoglu's weekend declaration that Turkey would be "unable to remain indiffer- ent to foreign activities which might occur in her security zone," the news- paper Ikdam declared that those who "thought Turkish-British friendship was cooling were greatly mistaken." In a review of Soviet Russia's atti- tude toward the new Turkish-Bulgar- ian nonaggression accord, the news- paper Comhuriyet said it had no doubt that Moscow gave "friendly suggestions to both sides" since the Balkans "are the natural safety zone of Russia." "Russia understands that if there is an actual attack on our boundaries we shall have to fight." Officials Assure U.S. Ties Still Hold WASHINGTON, Feb. 25. -()- Turkey reassured the United States today that her ties to Great Britain and Greece were unweakened by her non-aggression pact with Bulgaria or threatening German moves in the Balkans. Some uncertainty \still existed in, diplomatic quarters, howver, as to whether Turkey would fight only if attacked or would lend active sup- port to the British and Greeks if Ger- man troops used Bulgaria as the base for an attack on Greece. The assurances on Turkey's posi- tion were given at a conference of Turkish Ambassador Mehmet Munir Ertegun with Sumner Welles, Un- dersecretary of State. Koella To Discuss Pagnol's Works Prof. Charles Koella of the Ro- mance Languages department will give the second in the series of French lectures sponsored by LeCercle Fran- cais on "Topaze and the Other Works of Marcel Pagnol" at 4:15 p.m. to- day in Room 103 of the Romance Languages Building. He will analyze the popular psycho- logical writings of the modern French author. Professor Koella will also give the background and an appreciation New Tryouts J Those Eligible Are Asked To ReportToday The Michigan Technic. official publication of the College of Engin- eering, will hold tryouts for all eligi- ble sophomores and second semester freshmen at 5 p.m. today in Room 3046 of the East Engineering Build-,[ ing. George Weesner, '41E, editor of the magazine, will chair the meeting to explain the various functions of the publication and the types of exper- ience it will afford engineers who be- come members of the staff. Miss Lloyd Honored At Dinner For National Deans' Presidency At a surprise dinner yesterday in the Hussey room of the League, ap- proximately 250 students and friends' of Dean Alice C. Lloyd gathered to pay her honor at her recent elec- tion to the presidency of the National Association of Deans of Women. Miss Lloyd was presented with a large handkerchief bearing the auto- graphs of all the guests present, and a leather brief case by the League Council members, sponsors of the af- fair. In addition the Alumnae Coun- cil presented her with a set of Wedge- wood Michigan plates, while the wo- men of Jordan Hall gave her a ster- ling silver pin as a remembrance. Toastmistress at the banquet was Lee Hardy, '41, president of the League, while Doris Merker, '41, pres- idn nf :Jddiciarv Council presented Wolverines Favored In Annual State AAU Swim Meet Tonight By WOODY BLOCK Swimming champions of the state of Michigan will be crowned at 7:30 p.m. today when Matt Mann throws open the Sports building pool to a galaxy of stars for the annual Mich- igan AAU championships. There will be no preliminaries in the afternoon. With mejnbers of his own Wolver- ine team entered in every event, it would not be far from the realm of possibility if University of Michigan natators walked off with the lions share of titles-if not all of them. Wayne Sends Gardner Wayne University is sending Bobby Gardner for the diving event, but coach Leo Maas revealed his ace one dominated mostly by Matt Mann's team, interest in concentrated on Mann's individual stars. The opening 100 yard free style, to be run in two heats, will be a battle from start to finish. Sharemet vs. Tomski Gus Sharemet, rounding into better (Continued on Page 3) J-Hop Records Bring Third Gargoyle Sellout For the third time this year Gar- goyle had a complete sellout, this time in yesterday's sales of the Feb- , 16. ll ., % ? " ,